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Government officials also discussed the need for other measures, including deposit schemes for non-resident Indians, people familiar with the matter said.

Updated: Sep 11, 2018 10:18:19

By Bloomberg

Indian two thousand and five hundred rupee banknotes are arranged for a photograph in Mumbai.
(Bloomberg)

The government has asked the Reserve Bank of India to bolster efforts to support the rupee, Asia’s worst-performing currency of the past month, people familiar with the matter said.

Government officials communicated last week with the Reserve Bank of India on the need to intervene more aggressively in the market to support the rupee, the people said, asking not to be identified as the information is not public. They also discussed the need for other measures, including deposit schemes for non-resident Indians, the people said.

The rupee has sunk 11.6% so far this year versus the US dollar, set for its worst annual performance since 2011. It pared losses on Monday after a government official said the finance ministry and central bank are in touch on a daily basis, and the latter is intervening when needed. A spokesman for the finance ministry didn’t respond to calls made to his office.

The rupee has hit fresh lows nearly every day this month as high crude prices raise concerns about the oil-importing nation’s finances and the potential for contagion from emerging markets including Turkey and Argentina. The sharp drop could jeopardise India’s macroeconomic stability by increasing import costs and impinge on the ability of companies to repay overseas loans.

The local currency hit another record on Monday after data showed that India’s current-account deficit widened to the most in five years.

The currency carnage is likely to keep alive expectations that the RBI may extend its rate-increase cycle as early as next month after taking the benchmark to a two-year high in August.

The RBI sold $6.18 billion of foreign currency in June and $5.8 billion in May to protect the rupee, its data shows. The central bank has said it does not target any particular level of exchange rate and steps in only to curb undue volatility in the currency. Data on intervention is published with a lag.

(This story has been published from an agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.)